Kau Yi Chau


Kau Yi Chau, also known as Tai Kau Yi Chau, is an uninhabited island located west of Victoria Harbour, between Peng Chau and Green Island in Hong Kong. It is located on the crossroad of sea routes, east to west and north to south. The ferry between Central and Mui Wo sails close to the south of the island. Administratively it is part of Islands District.

Location

The island is isolated from other islands. To its east are Green Island, Little Green Island and Hong Kong Island. To its west are Siu Kau Yi Chau, Peng Chau. To its southwest are Sunshine Island and Hei Ling Chau. To its northwest is Lantau Island.

Geography

The island is no higher than. A radar station is situated south of its peak. Wave measurement monitors the wave surrounding since 1994. The island south is largely cliff and island is uninhabited. Other than the radar station, the island left Qing tombs, woods and rocks. Chun Hoi Shek is a major spot on the island. As uninhabited, no regular transport was set up for the island.

Name

Kau Yi means chair in the Cantonese language for the island's shape. It is also known as Tai Kau Yi as it is a larger chair compared to Siu Kau Yi, a smaller chair, on its west.

History

In 1971, the United States Navy ship USS Regulus riding out typhoon Rose grounded on Kau Yi Chau. After three weeks of attempting to refloat Regulus, it was finally decided that the damage she had incurred was too severe to warrant salvage.
The island was part of the blueprint of Port and Airport Development Strategy. A container port was drawn between the proposed reclamation between Lantau Island and Kau Yi Chau. A proposed cross harbour tunnel connects the reclamation and another proposed reclamation of Green Island. The plan was not realised as a result of prolonged disagreement between the governments of Britain and the PRC.

East Lantau Metropolis

The Hong Kong Government had introduced to build the East Lantau Metropolis by reclaiming land around the island《Enhancing Land Supply Strategy - Reclamation outside Victoria Harbour and Rock Cavern Development》in 2012 in an effort to increase land supply. It is projected to be the 3rd CBD of Hong Kong and have a population of 700 thousand people.